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Booties take up 'Free Running'

January 12 2008 at 7:08 PM
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Jack  (no login)

 
Interesting piece in today's Guardian: http://www.guardian.co.uk/military/story/0,,2239647,00.html]
Well, it's certainly an interesting concept.

Jack



Freerunning goes to war as marines take tips from EZ, Livewire and Sticky


Troops to be taught daredevil street moves to help urban combat. Have your say and watch clips of free running

Robert Booth
Saturday January 12, 2008
The Guardian

Freerunning, the youth craze which involves daredevil leaps from buildings and acrobatic stunts from lamp-posts, has emerged as the Royal Marines' latest weapon of urban warfare.

A squad of professional freerunners going by the names EZ, Livewire, Sticky and Spidey has begun training marine commandos in gravity-defying moves such as the "kong vault", "running cat" and "crane" in an effort to improve troops' street-to-street fighting ability.

The jumping techniques - in which the walls, stairs and bollards of urban landscapes become an assault course - were showcased in the opening sequence to the last James Bond film. The rising popularity of freerunning, also known as parkour, means it rivals skateboarding as a street craze.

Senior physical training instructors from the marines' base in Lympstone, Devon, have received initial training on the concrete of the Heygate estate, Walworth, south London, and the South Bank Centre, a favourite stomping ground because of its high-level walkways, undercrofts and staircases.

They have taken the knowledge back to their training gym and from this month will receive regular training from the Urban Freeflow crew, a professional London outfit which advised on the choreography for Casino Royale.

Captain Sean Lerwill, a senior physical training instructor who is behind the collaboration, said freerunning moves were likely to be incorporated into battle training for qualified green berets and might be introduced into basic training for would-be recruits.

"We found some of the moves were relevant for battle," he said. "For them it is about artistic expression. For example, they will run along a wall keeping a low profile because it looks good, but we need to do the same thing in urban combat to stay safe."

Techniques for jumping from roof to roof and dropping from a height would be used to improve physical training drills to condition troops for urban warfare, he said. For example, the marines spotted that the freerunners' method of dropping from a height, rolling on to their shoulder, back and leg and running on in one smooth movement maintains running speed and could reduce the chances of commandos being shot.

Another improvement could come from landing from jumps with one foot. Marines have traditionally landed on both feet to reduce the risk of sprains on rough ground, but freerunning teaches the use of one foot on more stable urban surfaces to maintain momentum.

Many, but not all, of the moves were manageable wearing combat dress and a rifle which could be held on a sling, Lerwill said. Since their initiation, the marines have practised on the streets of Exeter and established a Royal Marines Parkour Club.

An Admiralty spokesman said it supported the marines' decision despite freerunning's reputation as being subversive and counter-cultural. Some have even described its techniques as a manual for escaping burglars.

"I expected to find people who were a little bit lazy and maybe even involved in drug culture," admitted Lerwill. "But they were nothing like that." In fact, when the freerunners visited the Royal Marines HQ and tried their assault course wearing full kit and carrying a weapon, they recorded times quicker than those needed to qualify as a marine. EZ, the freerunner leading the training, said the marines had a voracious appetite for the vaults, flips and spins he taught them in their first two-day session in November. "They were fit, but I have to say they were very sore after the first day," he said.

"For years we have done our training in a certain way," said Lerwill. "It has taught people endurance and to deal with hardship, and much of it dates back to the Falklands war. For example, we do 20-hour yomps over Dartmoor ... it might be better to replace some of those generic exercises with others which will be better in an urban environment because of the work we are doing in Iraq and Afghanistan."

The initiative began as part of a recruitment drive for the Royal Marines called It's a State of Mind, which promotes the "sport, adventure and lifestyle" activities on offer to potential recruits, including skydiving, bungee jumping and mountain biking.

As part of the campaign the marines also tried coasteering - a sport combining swimming and cliff-scrambling to get around a rocky coastline - and were planning to film themselves cage-fighting to promote the diverse activities available, but this was cancelled on safety grounds.

There may be some officers who think the same should happen to the freerunning initiative. Corporal Ash Sleight, one of the marine PT instructors who trained in London, decided to practise the tricky "handstand to kong vault" move while on home leave. It didn't quite work and he broke his leg.

Leaps and bounds

Freerunning began in the 1980s as a counter to the dull slog of jogging. It gained its alternative name, parkour, a corruption of the French term for obstacle course, in the Paris banlieues. Film directors are increasingly being drawn to its speed and style.

The Bourne Ultimatum (2007) Matt Damon said freerunning leaps were the hardest part of the film's rooftop parkour sequences. Damon, rather than a stunt double, plays Bourne when he vaults off a building and in through a window.

Casino Royale (2006)

Freerunning co-founder Sébastien Foucan plays the terrorist Bond is pursuing in the opening sequence, in which Bond bounces off cranes in a construction site rooftop chase.

Breaking and Entering (2006)

Stars Jude Law and features a burglar who turns out to be a teenage free-runner, played by Rafi Gavron.

District 13 (2004)

The hero - played by one of parkour's founding fathers, David Belle - evades gangsters and drug barons in a Parisian slum. The film stunned audiences with acrobatics without using wires or special effects.

Yamasaki (2001)

A group of freerunners battle against the injustice of the Paris ghetto by using parkour techniques to steal from the rich and pay off medical bills for an injured friend.

Fay Schlesinger

 
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Acorn
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re: Booties take up 'Free Running'

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January 13 2008, 2:26 AM 

What a load of bollocks!

A tom or bootie is hard pressed with a very minimum of 30lbs kit to run and jump without injury. Generally he will carry more. In FIBUA (Fighting In Built-Up Areas) he will sometimes carry less from area to area but only during mouse-holing ot tunneling with his comrades bringing up his kit.

It sounds like a recruitement con to me which (hopefully) most booties will laugh at. Alternatively, RM PTIs (not exclusively) are too keen to be "cool". They would be better employed at maintaining and improving physical standards which, in all forces - including SF, have declined as society has softened.

Some RM PTIs should spend more time training whilst wearing fighting-order and less time watchin James Bond movies!


    
This message has been edited by Tommy_01 on Jan 13, 2008 9:55 AM


 
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'Tommy'
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Re: Booties take up 'Free Running'

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January 13 2008, 9:57 AM 

I've never doubted Toms and Booties keep fit - like the All Arms Course and P-Coy aren't bad enough on top of their regular fitness regimen - but this seems a needless risk to ankles, knees and other potential injuries.

______________________________________________

"Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat its mistakes..."

 
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Jim
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Re: Booties take up 'Free Running'

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January 14 2008, 1:04 AM 

I mentioned this in a November 26 ,07 piece on this board:
Some Royal Marines (PTI's) under Captain Lerewill,SP?
have begun to use and implement Parkour.

From what I gather the Royal Marines who are trying to implement this into training are hard core PARKOUR enthusiasts and because they like it they want it added to the training.
(similar to Sgt Larsens love of Gracie Brazilian Jujitsu and the Ultimate fighting and how he got that added to the US Army Basic training)

As said,once one adds Equipment and Boots as foot wear,running,jumping and covering distance or jumping from roof to roof are less able to be done in reality.

Parkour people are free runners in that they can do small simple jumps easily,but high runs and long jumps are looked at,trained and worked at.

The jumps on video are all calculated,not true free runs.

If the military has time to build models,with true heights and distances of a specific target to be jumped and trained then perhaps Parkour training would be useful.

I love the way in the article they discuss removing the Long Endurance work to go to more urban like training.
So we will replace endurance events in rugh weather and terrain,which is used to build MENTAL and PHYSICAL Toughness so Troops can develop a do not quit attitude,and we trash it for a sport for kids???

Not all the things Officers love to do on the outside of the Military needs to be included in training.

I cannot wait to see the Injury lists after they get this Parkour Program RUNNING,lol.

 
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Hard man Lassen
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Re: Booties take up 'Free Running'

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January 14 2008, 5:29 PM 

I remember once in 15 Para, while on a training night in aberdeen a local Kick boxer came to join us and all he kept on about was how good his fighting was. I was caught argueing with him once over this as I had worked with a few chop chop karate style lads on the door who were useless.

Eventually, McRae jnr asked him to take a lesson before we went for a wee run. Everything was going fine and it looked realy good, untill McRae took him aside, put him in some boots and 58 patten yoke and belt with a mere 25 pounds of sand in it and said, Attack me! (McRae at the time was also working on the door) The kick boxer said and I quote, "how the fuck are you supposed to fight in this clobber, you taking the piss? again the order, Attack me, The attack never happend and that was his last training night. First and only time I think I saw Rennie buy a round, we were all in fits of laughter.

 
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Acorn
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Re: Booties take up 'Free Running'

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January 14 2008, 5:53 PM 

"I saw Rennie buy a round".

I believed you up until that point!

 
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